Category: Emberhelm

  • The Wilderness Years Part 6

    The Wilderness Years Part 6

    Embers of Power

    The trial fire still burned in the hearts of the warriors long after the flames had faded.

    They left the stone circle at sunrise, the air thick with silence. Taranis walked unbound now, but still marked the collar firm around his neck, his wrists bruised, the pendant of obsidian pressing warm against his chest beneath the tunic Solaris had given him.

    No one spoke of the dragon.

    They didn’t need to. Its shadow had burned itself into every man’s memory.

    By midday, they reached the edge of a sprawling war camp carved between high ridges and pine forest. Smoke rose from scattered fires. Grael dismounted first and gave the order for rest and supplies. Taranis stood nearby, posture straight, though his limbs ached from the days of trials and visions.

    A hush followed him wherever he moved. Some men nodded. Others turned away.

    One older warrior spat at his feet and muttered, “Dragon-kissed freak.”

    Taranis didn’t respond. But Grael saw and said nothing.

    Inside the central tent, the tension grew.

    “You should exile him,” said Kareth, a clan captain with blood on his hands and ambition in his eyes. “Or bind him again. The men are talking.”

    “They always talk,” Grael replied coolly. “Let them.”

    “This boy walks free after breaking formation, defying orders, and drawing the attention of beasts older than the gods?”

    Grael looked up from the war map.

    “Exactly. He walked through fire and survived. He fought off Clawclan while half my guard bled out in the dirt. He was named by a Seer. You want to leash him again? You do it.”

    Kareth hesitated. “If he leads a rebellion, it’ll be your head.”

    “No,” Grael said. “It’ll be his. If he earns death, he’ll find it. But if he earns something more, I won’t stand in the way.”

    That night, Taranis sat near the outer fire, the pendant warm against his chest again. Solaris approached with a fresh poultice and a torn piece of roasted meat.

    “You look like you haven’t slept in days.”

    “I haven’t,” Taranis murmured. “Something’s changing.”

    Solaris frowned. “You mean in you?”

    “No. In the world.”

    A growl echoed in the hills not wolf, not wind. Something deeper. Some warriors looked up. A few rose to check their weapons.

    A young scout came running from the ridge.

    “Smoke! North side. Something’s burning!”

    They scrambled toward the hill’s edge and saw it.

    A rival clan’s border camp was ash and ruin. No screams, no survivors. Only smoldering black earth and claw marks in the rock.

    “Raiders?” Solaris asked.

    “No,” Taranis said quietly. “It’s a warning.”

    Grael joined them, silent, jaw tight.

    Kareth was already shouting. “This is what he brings! The dragon follows him. Death follows him!”

    “No,” Taranis said. “The dragon doesn’t follow me. It watches.”

    “Same thing.”

    Grael raised a hand. “Enough. We return to Emberhelm. There, the chieftains will decide what happens next.”

    The journey to Emberhelm took two days. The stone fortress carved into the mountains stood stark against the dawn ancient, proud, watching the valley like a sentinel.

    When they entered, the whispers turned to stares.

    Children peeked from behind barrels. Elders crossed their arms. A group of shieldmaidens flanking the gate parted only after Grael rode forward and gave the sign.

    Taranis dismounted, cloak billowing slightly behind him. No chains. No mask. Only the obsidian pendant.

    In the Great Hall, the Five Voices of the War Council sat in a semi-circle.

    Old warriors. Mothers of fallen sons. Leaders of lesser clans.

    One stood Sern, a matriarch with fire in her eyes and silver in her braid.

    “We saw the storm,” she said. “We saw the dragon’s wings. We heard the Seer’s cry.”

    Another voice cut in a young man named Fenric, blood cousin to the boy Taranis had crippled.

    “He’s cursed. He bled our kin, broke our laws, walked with beasts. Now you bring him here unbound?”

    Grael stepped forward. “I bring you a warrior.”

    “Not yet,” Sern said. “Not until the rite is finished.”

    “What rite?” Taranis asked.

    She pointed to the firepit at the centre of the chamber.

    “You were bound by man. Now let the flame judge if you are bound by fate.”

    They handed him a staff and stripped him to the waist. The collar remained. So did the pendant.

    The fire was lit with dried hawthorn, wolf hair, and elder root.

    He stepped into the circle.

    “Do you claim name or no name?” Lady Sern asked.

    Taranis raised his head. “I claim the storm.”

    A gust of wind blew through the open doors behind him.

    “Then speak your vow.”

    Taranis closed his eyes.

    “I was chained as beast. I was broken by man. But I rise not to rule only to walk free. I serve the flame, the wolves, the storm. If I break my word, may the dragon turn from me.”

    He thrust the staff into the fire.

    It did not burn.

    Instead, the flame spiraled into the air and far above, the sky answered with a distant roar.

    The hall went silent.

    Lady Sern bowed her head.

    “Then you are no longer beast. Nor slave. Nor tool.”

    She placed her hand on his collar.

    “From this day, you are Stormborne.”

    She broke the collar with a hammer of bronze.

    The pieces fell to the stone floor like the last chains of a life left behind.

    Does that mean he’s free?” Solaris asked.

    Taranis placed a hand to his neck, fingers brushing the worn ridge where the collar had once pressed deep.

    “Or am I to be exiled?”

    A hush fell again, broken only by the wind rustling through the pine above.

    “Exile him,” came a voice from the gathered crowd, “and I will hunt him myself.”

    All heads turned.

    It was not Grael who spoke, nor one of the regular warband. It was a man cloaked in dark fur, standing apart from the others near the treeline scarred face, sun-dark skin, hair braided with bone. A chieftain from another clan.

    “He bears the storm’s mark. He’s no beast. No slave. And not mine to cast out.” His voice was low, graveled with age and fire. “But if you send him away, don’t expect him to come back.”

    Taranis didn’t flinch. His eyes locked on the stranger’s. He neither bowed nor raised his head. Just… endured.

    Grael stepped forward.

    “He’s not exiled,” the general said. “Nor is he yet free. The trial burned away the mask, but chains leave scars longer than flame.”

    “And what is he now?” Solaris asked.

    Grael looked to the warriors, the gathered villagers, the scouts and wounded men who had seen the dragon descend.

    “He is Stormborne,” he said. “Named not by man, but by thunder. And while I draw breath, that name will be honoured.”

    There was a ripple in the crowd not agreement, not rejection. Just change. Unease becoming belief.

    Taranis turned to Solaris. “Then I stay?”

    Solaris nodded. “If you want to.”

    “I don’t know what I want,” the boy admitted. “I only know I’m still breathing.”

    Beside him, the black scale the one left by the dragon was now strung on a simple leather thong, hanging from his belt like a forgotten relic. He touched it once, gently.

    A woman stepped forward from the watching crowd. She carried no weapons only a clay bowl filled with ash and herbs.

    “I came from the ridge when I heard the trial fire was lit,” she said. “If the dragon marked him, then his wounds must be sealed properly. Not with chains. With earth.”

    She knelt before Taranis and dipped two fingers into the bowl. Ash and sage stained her fingertips. She reached up and slowly touched each side of his jaw where the mask had pressed hardest.

    “You have walked through smoke,” she whispered. “Now rise through flame.”

    Taranis stood, a little taller than before.

    Grael gave a curt nod. “We break camp tomorrow. Clawclan still stirs in the lowlands. But the boy rides his own horse now. No packs. No tether.”

    “And the collar?” Solaris asked.

    Grael glanced at it now lying in the dirt.

    “Leave it where it fell.”

    As the crowd began to scatter, a new chant rose quietly from the younger warriors near the fire.

    Stormborne.

    Not shouted.

    Not demanded.

    Spoken like a secret remembered.

    Like a name the wind had always known.

    © 2025 E.L. Hewitt. All rights reserved.
    This work is part of the StormborneLore series.
    Do not copy, reproduce, or distribute without permission.

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    Taranis The Wilderness Years Part 3.

    The Wilderness Years Part 4

    The Wilderness Years Part 5

    The Iron Voice of Grael.

    One Foot in Two Worlds

    Survival Gruel of the Exile.

  • Grael and the Slave

    Grael and the Slave


    They said he was born of a storm,
    but I found him in chains,
    skin split by the lash,
    eyes empty, yet still watching.

    They called him exile.
    They called him cursed.
    They called him meat for wolves.
    But wolves do not howl for cowards.

    He did not beg.
    He did not speak unless commanded.
    Even when the whip cracked bone,
    he stood until he dropped.

    I gave him no mercy,
    only water, only duty.
    And still, he rose.

    He refused the kill.
    Said, “No one’s worthless.”
    In that moment,
    he was worth more than the son of kings.

    I do not love the boy.
    But I will make him a blade.
    The gods have already tempered his soul.
    I am only the fire.

    © 2025 E.L. Hewitt StormborneLore.co.uk

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    Taranis The Wilderness Years Part 3.

    The Iron Voice of Grael.

    Survival Gruel of the Exile.

  • The Iron Voice of Grael.

    The Iron Voice of Grael.

    They say he walked from firelight,
    With ash upon his skin,
    A blade of bone across his back,
    And fury deep within.

    Not born of storm or gentle dawn,
    But hammered in the night,
    He came with eyes like hollow coals,
    That burned without a light.

    The slaves all knew his heavy tread,
    It echoed like a drum.
    No chain he wore upon his wrists,
    Yet none dared see him come.

    He did not speak of mercy,
    Nor weep for those who bled,
    But every boy he trained in war,
    Would rise where cowards fled.

    His voice, they said, could bend the spine,
    And set the strong to heel,
    Yet once they saw him face the dark,
    They whispered he could feel.

    A storm stood waiting at his door,
    A curse upon his name,
    Yet Grael did not flinch or fall,
    He taught the dark to shame.

    They built no shrine in Grael’s name,
    No songs the bards recite,
    But in the hearts of those he forged,
    He walks with them through fight.

    ©2025written and crested ELHewitt All rights reserved.This poem is part of the StormborneLore collection.No part of this work may be reproduced, copied, or distributed without permission, except for brief quotations with proper credit.

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    Survival Gruel of the Exile.

    Poem of Transformation.

  • Poem of Transformation.

    Poem of Transformation.

    Chains and Wolves.

    I did not choose the chains,
    but I learned their shape.
    Learned the weight of silence,
    the taste of hunger,
    the way rope sings
    when it bites through bone.

    They thought the collar
    would teach me stillness.
    But stillness is not silence,
    and I was never empty.

    I remember
    the wolves beneath moonlight,
    the breath of frost against my skin,
    the old songs in my blood
    that no blade can carve out.

    I am not the boy you cast away.
    I am not the beast you tried to break.
    I am the howl that returns
    when you think the dark is done with you.
    I am the storm that waits
    beneath your quiet sky.

    Let the mask bite.
    Let the tether burn.
    I do not beg.
    I endure.

    And that,
    is what you fear.

    © 2025 EL Hewitt. All rights reserved.
    This poem is part of the StormborneLore collection.
    No part of this work may be reproduced, copied, or distributed without permission, except for brief quotations with proper credit.

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    Survival Gruel of the Exile.

  • THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS PART 2

    By EL Hewitt

    Taranis stood for hours, his injured back pressed against the tree. Two men watched his every move.

    “Hey, stop right there, slave,” one growled, noticing a hand slipping free. He strode over and punched the teen in the stomach, making Taranis grunt in pain. Then he resecured the hand and looped a rope around the boy’s neck.

    “Just move. Go on, make my day, exiled one,” said the stocky, dark-haired guard.

    “I just wanted water. It’s right there. Please, Sorrel,” Taranis pleaded.

    “You know the orders. Two days without,” said the other man, watching closely. “Your commander will come tomorrow. Commander Greal.”

    “Should we secure his head too?” the man added. “No movement at all?”

    “No. He’s got the collar, and the rope’s above it. It should be tight. His hands are secured again. We just follow orders. No food. No water,” Sorrel replied.

    “Commander Greal? That’s who I’m under?” Taranis managed to spit out. The rope around his neck made it hard to breathe or swallow.

    “Yes. He’s coming to train you. You’ll be tethered. Chains, binds ankles, wrists, neck until he says otherwise, cursed exile.”

    Taranis swallowed, almost choking.

    As the sun rose and the shifts changed, a smith appeared.

    “Time to change the collar, but that rope makes it tricky,” he muttered. He carried tools stone and bone hammers, and a strange new collar made of carved deer bone and inlaid stones, blessed by the Seer.

    “No please. I’m sorry,” Taranis whispered, trying to hide his fear.

    “Hey, Tanar, look at me,” Solaris said gently, stepping forward. “You’re the kid who doesn’t fear anything, right? The one who slept with wolves and rides dragons?”

    “Morrigan and Boldolph,” Taranis whispered. “They still howl.”

    “Yes. They cry for you.” Solaris crouched. “I know you’re scared. I asked if you could play after this punishment. But you have to stay in the clan’s sight.”

    “Really?” Taranis asked, making a face as the smith worked.

    The old collar shattered. The Seer stepped forward, chanting softly. The new collar was fitted around his neck tight but precise.

    “This is to contain and restrict what you are believed to be,” the Seer said. “It bears your name in the old tongue. Carved by flame. Blessed in shadow. It does not break unless your master wills it.”

    “Will it grow with him?” Solaris asked.

    “It will last a few years. Then we replace it. But it is a warrior’s collar.”

    “Can we still attach the tether?” a guard asked.

    “Here,” said the smith, tapping the metal hoop. “The restraints remain the same.”

    Everyone in the village looked to the boy some with sorrow, some with fear.

    “Master, I won’t run or hurt anyone. You saved me,” Taranis said softly. But the masters voice remain silent, the boy had been their property 7 years nothing would change it.

    He was removed from the tree. His hands were bound low at the waist. The sinew cords bit deeper with every hour. A leather tether linked the collar to his wrists, forcing him to hunch forward.

    “Walk,” the clan leader commanded.

    Taranis took a few difficult steps.

    “Father, how long is he in this for?” Calor asked.

    “This is punishment. When I see a correction in his behaviour, I’ll allow an alteration.”

    After a few steps, Taranis fell.

    “Get up,” barked a guard.

    The leader grabbed Solaris’s arm. “No. He must do it alone. No one helps him.”

    “Fuck you,” Taranis hissed, losing his temper. He tried to turn his head, but the tether tightened around his throat. He struggled. Slowly, painfully, he managed to rise to his knees.

    “I’ll kill you for this. One day.”

    For that outburst, they dragged him through the camp by the tether. Word spread fast the exile had defied them again.

    They brought him to the sacred stone circle.

    Taranis staggered. Blood dried at the corners of his mouth. The clan watched not with pity, but quiet judgment.

    At the center, the clan leader held a mask.

    It was beast-shaped, stitched hide, with a carved bone bit meant to force the jaw open and silent. Leather straps dangled like tongues.

    “This is what you become when you threaten your own,” he said. “Not man. Not wolf. Not worthy of freedom.”

    He strapped the mask to Taranis’s face. The bone slipped between his teeth. The world became heat, shame, and pressure.

    They paraded him around the circle. No words. No cheers. Only the crackle of fire and the quiet of judgment.

    Then they brought him back to the tree.

    He was secured again tether pulled tight, hands bound low, unable to straighten. A bucket of clean water sat just out of reach.

    Solaris and a friend sat nearby.

    “I get that he hates us,” the friend muttered. “But this? This isn’t helping.”

    “How long’s your dad leaving him like that?”

    “He’s planning a fight. Says the slave goes in bound. As punishment.”

    Later, a group approached the tree. “He’s fighting the hunter who disrespected your father,” one said. “Only this time, he doesn’t get unbound.”

    “That’s death,” Nudge said. “This is a unique slave.”

    They dragged Taranis toward the circle again. Tether at his neck. Hands bound. Mask still biting. His feet scraped the dirt.

    The hunter was waiting older, heavier, armed with a bone club.

    “This one’s half-starved and shackled,” the man jeered. “A gift fight.”

    The Seer raised her hand. “Begin.”

    The club came down fast.

    Taranis dodged. Took the blow on the shoulder. Pain exploded. He dropped. Rolled. Used the tether’s pull to spin and slammed his wrists into the man’s knee.

    A stumble.

    The crowd laughed and jeered .

    He stood barefoot, bleeding, bound and faced his enemy.

    This time, he waited. At the last second, he kicked low behind the knee. The hunter dropped.

    Taranis slammed into him, shoulder first. They hit the ground hard.

    Bound wrists wrapped around the man’s throat.

    “Enough,” said the Seer.

    He didn’t let go.

    “Enough!” she repeated.

    He finally released the man, who gasped for breath.

    Taranis stood. Mask soaked in blood. Breath ragged.

    “He’s not just a slave,” Solaris whispered. “He’s… something else.”

    One of the leader’s sons stepped forward. “Kill him.”

    Taranis hesitated.

    Then the look in his eyes went blank.

    He obeyed.

    He killed with a single motion. Trained. Efficient.

    The camp went still.

    “I didn’t think he’d actually do it,” the son whispered.

    “You made him do it,” Solaris said coldly. “He obeyed your order.”

    The leader stepped forward.

    “I gave no such command. But a command was followed.”

    He turned away.

    “Take him to the Ridge.”

    They dragged him up the mountain path.

    The wind screamed. No songs. No prayers. Just feet against earth.

    The Ridge loomed an old stone, cracked and worn by time.

    They fastened him there. Arms above his head. Rope around his chest. Collar tethered tight. Ankles bound. Spine locked in an arch. The mask stayed on.

    No fire. Only wind. And a wooden bucket of water, just out of reach.

    Night came.

    Time blurred.

    He dreamed of wolves. Of fire in the sky. Of names long forgotten Rayne, Drax, Lore.

    And then Solaris came.

    “I asked my father for leniency,” he said softly. “He said pain teaches obedience.”

    “This isn’t obedience,” his friend muttered. “It’s madness.”

    Solaris crouched.

    “I don’t want you to die,” he whispered. “But I can’t stop this. Not tonight.”

    Before leaving, he placed a carved stone with a sun symbol beside the bucket.

    A promise.

    The night passed.

    Morning came.

    He had not died.

    And that, somehow, was worse.

    When they removed the mask, the clan leader gave him a small sip of water.

    “Why did you kill him?” he asked.

    “Your son told me to,” Taranis said, voice raw. “If I don’t obey, I’m punished. I did what I was told and still, I’m punished.”

    “How long do I stay like this?”

    “One day,” the man said. “You’ll be taken down tonight. Try not to fight the restraints.”

    A boy ran up the path.

    “The general is here. He demands to see the prisoner.”

    A shadow moved at the ridge’s edge.

    And the storm was far from over.

    To be continued

    :

    ©written and created by ELHewitt

    Further Reading

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

  • THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    THE WILDERNESS YEARS Part 1.

    The enslaved Tanaris

    The clouds hung low, casting a strange dark light over the gathering. The council of elders stood in a tight circle around a young boy.

    “Stormborne, you are now and forever exiled from this village, this clan, and your family,” the elder leader declared, his eyes fixed on the child. Elder Ysra held the ceremonial staff before her, unmoving.

    The little boy turned to his family. “Father, I didnot hurt anyone. Please” he begged, but his words were met with silence.

    All thirteen of his brothers turned their backs. Then his mother did the same. Conan, his father, hesitated but looked away, knowing he could not stand against the council.

    Taranis ran from the camp, tears blinding him as he fled into the woods. His sprint slowed to a walk. He stumbled across berries and gathered nettles to eat. His first meal as an exile—nettles and nuts.

    “Not filling,” he whispered, “but the old ones ate it. Mama used to cook it.” He curled against the base of an ancient tree. Overhead, dragons roared. Wolves howled in the distance.

    Time stilled. The ache of loneliness pressed down on him. He missed his brothers, his mothers humming, and even his fathers barked commands. He walked on, aimless, until he saw a white wolf. He froze.

    The wolf approached, sniffed him, cautious but curious. Then a large black wolf circled nearby.

    “We will not hurt you. Iam Boldolph,’ said the black wolf said not aloud, but directly into his mind.

    ‘You you wont?” the boy whispered as other wolves approached, dropping meat at his feet.

    “No,” said the white wolf, lying down. “We are here to help. Your father sent us. I am Morrigan. Come, lie with me. Warm yourself.”

    Taranis walked to her and buried himself in her thick fur. Boldolph stood guard, ever watchful.

    He had lost his home, his name, and his kin. He had seen a friend die. Three winters passed, and the boy grew thin and pale, cradled in fur and silence. Then one morning, feverish and weak, he was found.

    “Father, hes curled up with the wolves,” a boy said.

    “We will take him. He will serve as a slave,” the man replied, lifting Taranis with ease.

    They carried him to their camp. Women nursed him back to health, but one day he awoke and reached for his neck. A collar.

    “Leave it,” said a teenage boy sitting nearby. ‘They will beat you if you touch it.”

    “Who are you?” Taranis rasped.

    ” I am Solaris of black claw. I am one of your owners sons,” he said, offering him bread. “You are in the Black Claw clans camp. My father found you fevered and curled up with wolves. You are to stay here as a slave.”

    From that day, Taranis worked from sunrise to sunset. He obeyed without question, learning to serve in kitchens and at the forge. He heard whispers of a cursed child, exiled and touched by dark forces.

    On his eighteenth birthday, he hauled stones beneath the harsh gaze of the masters. One man held a branch, ready to strike.

    He was tall now, but thin. His back bore scars from the collar and the lash. All he wanted was to see Boldolph and Morrigan again.

    A slap of something warm and wet stung his spine.

    “Keep it moving!” barked a voice.

    The clan leaders sons played nearby. Solaris laughed with his younger brothers by the grain shed. One of them, a tall boy with a cruel grin, threw a rotten turnip.

    It struck Taranis in the chest. The others laughed.

    “Stop it,” Solaris snapped. “He is not our enemy.”

    “He is a slave,” the older boy sneered. “You and Father found him half-dead. No name, no clan. Just stories of a cursed exile.”

    That was me. Eight years old, alone in the snow. They said I was cursed. Touched by darkness.

    But I was just a child.

    He didnot remember lunging only the feel of dirt flying behind his heels. Rage took over.

    The branch came down before he landed a punch.

    Crack.

    Pain burst across his shoulders. A second strike. A third, slower, deliberate.

    Taranis didnot cry out.

    The man loomed. “You want to fight the leaders sons? Try again, and we will gut the wolves that raised you. Make you skin them yourself.”

    That stopped him.

    His vision blurred. He tasted blood his or someone else’s he wasn’t sure but then a shadow blocked the light.

    Solaris.

    He stepped forward, fists clenched but low.

    “You will kill him like this,” Solaris said.

    “Hes still breathing,” the overseer growled. “Let the beast learn his place.”

    “Hes not a beast.” Solaris growled

    Silence.

    “I have seen beasts. This ones still human.”

    That day, there were no more beatings. But no food either.

    Night fell cold. Taranis curled beside the embers, shivering.

    Footsteps. He didnot lift his head. If they came to hurt him, so be it.

    Something thudded beside him. Bread, wrapped in cloth.

    “Its Still warm,” Solaris muttered. “I stole it before dinner. Donot die. Not yet.”

    “it’s good I don’t intend to” Taranis took the bread in both hands. The warmth bled into his finger as he stared at the fire. There was a time hed healed a bird, mended his brothers broken arm. Even healed his brother but now He touched his collar.

    “I will escape. I will kill them all,’ he whispered.

    His family was a fading memory. The names Rayne, Drax, Draven, Lore blurred in his mind.

    Then he heard a howl. “Thats Silver,” he whispered.” Thats Boldolph. And Morrigan. They stayed near.”

    Men came. They dragged him to a tree marked by rope and tied his hands above his head. Children threw scraps at his face. Laughter. Rotten food.

    A man approached. Large, green-eyed, wrapped in furs.

    “Slave, you will stay here overnight. No food for two days for daring to touch my son,” he said. “Twenty lashes if you try anything.”

    Taranis bowed his head. He knew not to speak. Not to fight.

    As they walked away, he remained in silence, bound and bruised.

    “Two days,” the man said to a woman. “No food. No water. Do not tend his wounds.”

    The coals glowed nearby.

    “Make him walk it,” said a boy named Root. They prodded Taranis toward hot stones.

    He resisted.

    “Please don’t make me’ he pleaded his hands rebound and a tether held by another boy.

    “Walk,” another growled.

    A younger boy smirked as he stepped across the coals unfazed.

    “Hes not normal,” whispered Calor. “Is that the one the enemy fears?”

    ‘He speaks with wolves. And dragons,” the Seer answered.

    “Bring our best fighter,” the leader ordered. “Let them fight.”

    They dragged Taranis, barely conscious, to the firelit circle. The crowd formed in a crooked ring.

    Barefoot, bruised, he stood in the dirt. His collar scraped with every breath.

    Rukar, the clans champion, stepped forward. Twice his size. A necklace of teeth. Leather-wrapped fists.

    “Fight,” the elder barked.

    No weapons. No mercy.

    The first punch knocked him flat. The second split his lip.

    Thunder cracked. Lightning danced.

    “Come on, exile,” someone jeered. “Show us your curse.”

    But Taranis rolled. Rukars foot slammed into a stone instead of ribs.

    Taranis launched upward, shoulder-first into Rukars knee. The brute staggered.

    Dirt in the eyes. A headbutt. Teeth bared like a wolf.

    Rukar swung. Another blow grazed Taranis temple. Blood poured.

    This was not about victory.

    It was about survival.

    He twisted low, locking Rukars arm. A snap echoed. The champion fell, howling.

    Silence.

    Taranis knelt over him, ready to strike.

    He didn’t move. He just stood

    Bloodied. Shaking. Alive.

    The Seers voice broke the silence. “The wolves taught him well.”

    Taranis bowed to the master, kneeling as he had once knelt to his father.

    “Take him to the tree,” the leader said. “Hes now a warrior-slave. He will earn his freedom in battle. But punishment for attacking my son still stands.”

    They resecured him to the tree, pain burning through every limb.

    Later that night, Solaris approached with broth. His father watched.

    “You are a warrior-slave now,” Solaris said. “They will send you to war.”

    Taranis did not answer.

    He just drank the broth and stared into the fire.

    Copyright EL Hewitt

  • Beneath the Storm-Crown

    Beneath the Storm-Crown

    I stood where thunder carved the sky,
    Where old oaths broke, and none asked why.
    The staff I raised was not for war,
    But for the ghosts I still fight for.

    Boldolph’s eyes were iron flame,
    They spoke of love, not seeking fame.
    His growl a warning, not a threat
    A brother’s bond I won’t forget.

    The wolves still watch. The dragons wake.
    Each vow we make, each path we take
    A storm-born soul must never stray
    From fire-wrought truth or shadowed way.

    Let others rule with golden tongue,
    I lead where pain and praise are sung.
    For every scar upon my frame
    Is carved from love, not just from flame.

  • The Halls of Emberhelm

    The Halls of Emberhelm

    Court Beneath the Storm


    A tale from the Chronicles of Taranis Stormborne

    The stone halls of Emberhelm still held the breath of thunder. The storm had passed, but the scent of damp earth and smoke clung to every crack and carving.

    Outside, the banners of the three Houses shifted gently in the wind. Flame, Shadow, and Storm. Inside, the High Warlord of Caernath sat upon the seat of judgment, the storm-carved throne of his ancestors.

    Taranis wore no crown. His only adornment was the silver cuff upon his wrist, the one shaped like twisted flame. Around him stood those who had fought beside him, bled for him, defied death with him.

    Lore stood silent to the left, hands folded into his long dark sleeves. Boldolph crouched at the side of the hall like a black statue, eyes ever scanning. Draven leaned near the great hearth, murmuring with a war-priest. Rayne stood furthest back, half-shadowed, watching everything.

    The court was full.

    Farmers. Warriors. Mothers. Messengers. Petitioners. Accusers.

    This was the burden of the Stormborne to listen.

    The first voice was a child’s.

    “My brother did not steal,” she said, eyes red from the wind. She clutched a doll made of grass and thread. “He only took what the wolves left. We were hungry.”

    Her mother knelt beside her, face pale, silent with shame.

    Taranis rose. “Where is the boy now?”

    A man stepped forward. Greying, armed, not unkind. “In the cells, my lord. The bread he took belonged to House Umbra’s stores.”

    Lore turned his head slowly. “Bread unused for days. Moulding in a bin.”

    “Aye,” said the man. “But rules are rules.”

    Taranis stepped down from the dais. He did not look at the guards. He knelt to the girl.

    “What is your name?”

    “Aella,” she whispered.

    “Aella,” he said, “your brother is no thief. He is a survivor. And from this day, your family eats under the protection of Emberhelm.”

    He turned to the court. “Let the stores be opened to those in hunger. Starvation is not a crime. And those who would hoard while others suffer will answer to me.”

    The next petition was colder.

    Two men from the borderlands bowed stiffly. One bore a jagged scar along his scalp.

    “My lord, Black Claw banners were seen near the Witherwood. We ask permission to hunt them down.”

    A murmur rose. Boldolph straightened.

    Taranis narrowed his eyes. “How many?”

    “A dozen. More. Hiding in the ruins.”

    Rayne shifted, his hand brushing the old collar scar on his neck.

    “No,” said Taranis.

    Gasps.

    “We do not chase ghosts and bleed men for vengeance. Not now. Not today. Fortify the border. Send scouts. But no hunt.”

    The men looked uneasy.

    Draven raised his voice. “What if they attack?”

    “Then we crush them,” said Taranis, steel in his voice. “But we do not start the fire.”

    Boldolph gave a faint growl of approval.

    Later, as the court thinned, an old woman with clouded eyes was led forward.

    “I was once a healer,” she said. “Cast out in the time before. I seek no pardon, only a place.”

    Morrigan stepped ahead from the shadows.

    “I know her,” she said. “She taught me names of plants I still use.”

    Taranis looked to the court. “Is there any who speak against her?”

    Silence.

    “Then let her be welcomed to Hearthrest,” he said. “Let her wisdom serve again.”

    The old woman wept.

    As the hall emptied, Lore remained behind.

    “You did well,” he said.

    “I did what had to be done.”

    “Which is often the hardest thing.”

    Taranis sat again upon the throne. He looked to the high carved beams, where the banners of the Stormborne rustled gently.

    “The war will come again,” he said.

    “It always does.”

    “Then let this peace be something worth protecting.”

    Lore nodded. “So we fight, not for power. But for dignity.”

    Taranis gave a half smile.

    “For bread. For brothers. For those who can’t fight. That’s what this court is for.”

    And above them all, in the rafters where the light touched the carvings of wolves and dragons, the storm winds whispered through the stone:

    © StormborneLore. Written by Emma for StormborneLore. Not for reproduction. All rights reserved.

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  • After the Duel

    After the Duel

    A Fireside Conversation

    The courtyard had long emptied. The ash of the fire pits still glowed faintly, casting soft light on stone walls and weary limbs.

    Taranis sat alone, legs stretched, a jug of broth in one hand,. the other flexing and sore from the clash with Boldolph.

    The crack of staffs still echoed in his bones.

    Footsteps approached not boots, but clawed paws. Heavy, padded, unmistakable.

    Boldolph.

    Without a word, the old wolf-man knelt beside him, a strip of clean linen in hand. He took Taranis’s wrist and began to bind the bruises, slow and methodical, like a ritual done a hundred times.

    “You didn’t hold back,” Taranis said after a moment.

    “You didn’t ask me to.”

    The silence between them was old, familiar. Like the stillness before a storm. Or the hush before a boy became a warlord.

    “I needed them to see I bleed too,” Taranis muttered, wincing as the linen tightened. “That I fall. That I get back up.”

    Boldolph grunted.

    “They already know you bleed,” he said. “They just needed to see you still feel it.”

    Taranis looked toward the sky. Smoke trailed like threads into the blackness. One dragon circled high above, a quiet sentinel.

    “I keep thinking,” he said, “about when I was exiled. Alone in the wilds. All I had was that storm inside me and the promise that no one was coming.”

    He looked down at the staff beside him.

    “And now… now there’s you. Solaris. Lore. Drax. Rayne. Even Draven. I have everything I never thought I would. And I don’t know how to hold it without crushing it.”

    Boldolph didn’t speak at first. Just poured a second jug of broth and handed it to him.

    Then he said, low and hoarse:
    “Every beast that’s ever bared teeth knows fear. Not of pain. Of losing what it’s fought to protect.”

    He paused, eyes distant.

    “I was exiled once too. Long before you were born. I clawed through snow and silence, not knowing if I was cursed or chosen. I still don’t.”

    Taranis turned to him.

    “You stayed. Even cursed. Even as a wolf.”

    Boldolph nodded.

    “Because someone had to. And because I believed that one day, the one I guarded would understand the weight of the fire he carried.”

    The flames crackled beside them. Taranis took a slow sip of broth.

    “I understand it now.”

    Boldolph gave a grunt soft, almost approving. Then he stood, stretched, and turned toward the shadows.

    “You’re not alone anymore, High Warlord,” he said. “Stop trying to fight like you are.”

    Then he was gone, back into the night, tail flicking behind him like a whisper of old magic.

    Taranis sat a while longer.

    Then he smiled.

    Not like a warlord. Not like a weapon.

    Like a man who had bled, fallen, and been lifted again by the hand of a wolf.

    Thank you for reading.© 2025 Emma Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this content is prohibited.

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  • The Road to Umbra Written from Lore’s perspective

    The Road to Umbra Written from Lore’s perspective

    An abstract illustration featuring a colorful design with intertwined patterns, prominently displaying the words 'LORE STORMBORNE' and 'ELH' at the center.
    A vibrant artwork reflecting the themes of struggle and resilience in the narrative of StormborneLore.

    House of Shadow

    I do not speak of heroes.
    I speak of those who walked in silence.
    Of boots torn at the sole,
    and breath taken with care
    lest the wind betray them.

    I walked the road to Umbra alone,
    but never unmarked.
    Each tree knew my name,
    each stone held a memory,
    and the crows whispered
    what the living dared not say.

    My brothers called it exile.
    The warlords called it treason.
    The wolves knew better.
    They call it the long return.

    I did not carry banners.
    I carried wounds.

    I did not seek the throne.
    I sought peace and found shadows
    that bled like I did.

    And when the night fell thick with frost,
    and even the stars looked away,
    I did not pray for light.

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